Where did you read this article, Sherpa? Was it in a Family News of long ago? It doesn't ring a bell. I believe the Rayls have been out of NTM for quite some time now. But yes, the sentiments you mention were reflected by others I remember too. All the rules seemed to me to be made to make the dorm parents' lives easier. Not the kids, or their parents.
Examples from my own memory: Radio contact only once a week. No, little second-grader MK, you can't talk to your parents in the village today, it's only Tuesday. If parents are passing through the school/flight center, and you're spending the night, no, don't ask if your child can come sleep in the guest room with you. It just upsets them, and the rest of the dorm kids. If you're passing through and will only be there a few hours, don't even see your kids at all. Don't take them out of class, or disrupt their routine, just pretend that you're not even there, just a few yards away from them. (Since you're separated most of the time anyway, this shouldn't be too intolerable, right?) I'm sure one of the dorm parents' least favorite things was to have small children crying for their mommies and daddies. I'm sure they hated that. So ... keep them busy, keep them in a routine, keep them from thinking too much about home. And our children were also told, "When you go home on school break, you don't need to be telling your parents anything about what goes on here in the dorm.." Wow, what a burden to place on a small child.
Oh, dear God ... the pain, the regret, the disbelief at my own lack of backbone and initiative ... comes sweeping over me once more.
I am so sorry. So, so, so sorry. I will never get over this sorrow.
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